When she was growing up, no one in her rural village, Misree Kolhi, gave birth under the care of a trained health worker. “Unskilled, untrained birth attendants were doing deliveries in our community. Some of the newborns died and some of the women had infections during deliveries,” she recounted.

Overcoming doubt and criticism

In rural Pakistan, many people consider it shameful or unorthodox for women to work outside the home. According to a 2012 survey in Pakistan, 70 per cent of respondents said that when women work, their children suffer.

Many of the midwives faced these attitudes, as well.

“My in-laws and other relatives were against me,” said Shabana Jabir Ansari, 27, from Mushtrika Colony. “Sometime due to my duties – morning and evening shifts – people said negative comments. That hurt me.”

Fozia Foto, 32, had the same experience in Hussain Khan Laghari Village. “I was the first girl who studied in my family and the first to become a midwife, so initially our relatives were against me,” she said.

She stayed in hostels while enrolled in the midwifery school, which critics also used against her.

“People said that I was living alone at the school and said so many bad things about my character,” she remembered.

Slowly, the midwives say, use of modern family planning methods is increasing.

And they are also accomplishing the goal that motivated them in the first place: They are saving lives.

Kousar Dahri, 32, remembered reviving a newborn baby in her village of Khamiso Khan Dahri.

“There was a woman in the community. She already had six babies, and she came for the delivery of the seventh,” Ms. Dahri said. “She delivered a son who required resuscitation, which I had been trained on. I started CPR, following the steps, and the baby was successfully resuscitated.”

Expanding training and support

So far, over 300 midwives have benefitted from the coaching and mentorship programme.

Plans are now underway to scale up midwifery training efforts.

The 18-month midwifery training programme is being expanded to 24 months, with help from UNFPA. And the midwifery coaching programme will be rolled out to all the districts in Sindh through 2018.

These programmes will empower more women to save lives.

As for Ms. Dahri, she says the experience of saving that newborn stays with her.

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